>>7402527They do feel sterile but at the same time every neighborhood has to start somewhere you know.

I live in a suburb in the South that is 57 years old and has a lot of large, developed trees. One stark contrast between older neighborhoods like that and newly build neighborhoods: how ungodly hot new neighborhoods can get. There is not shade whatsoever so everything gets cooked by the sun and I'm sure the AC is having to run twice as hard in those houses as compared to houses in my neighborhood. Makes you appreciate those trees even more.

>>74015626/10 - although cities are non-comfy, being able to see wagie cagers stuck in traffic from faraway is very comfy. You would get extra points for much heavier traffic and much greater distance from the city, preferably a comfy hilltop vantage point.

>>74021178.5/10 heavy rain is very comfy. I agree with you about large trees and suburbs. Old buildings are also relatively comfy.

>>74025357/10 - this is a niche kind of comfy and it may be a 9/10 for some people

>>7407072i posted five pictures in the picture's we've taken ourselves thread which i'm too lazy to link here as i'm about to go to bed, if you find that thread, each image of mine is labelled 1 - 5, hope you like 'em

>>7406341>>7402739>6/10 old cars are a nice touch, but what is that awful red plastic fencing in the background? I would never be able to use this as a permanent bg because that ugly shit is so distracting.

It's a long exposure shot and the red lines are the tail lights of a passing vehicle.